Barça will not play in Miami, what a disappointment!


Having to go to Miami to play a La Liga match was a bad idea, but the football business is so cash-strapped that they made it look like a brilliant idea, so Barça sadly laments the "lost opportunity to expand the competition's image to a strategic market."
Yes, when Barça plays, millions of people around the world drop what they're doing, even sleeping, and the culés on the American east coast were crazy about the game. But with 20-team leagues, Champions League, Copa del Rey, Spanish Super Cups in this human rights paradise that is Saudi Arabia, and constant interruptions for international matches, the only thing missing was to burden the players even more by going to play against Villarreal in Miami (of course, if you really think about it, one plane to Miami isn't ten).
The owners of the business are making their wet dream come true, which is that football will be like basketball, with games every two or three days, and cash in hand. In short, there is no need for the local fans to suffer, as they have known for years that by not paying, they are not in charge (they do not pay at the level that the networks or sponsors pay), and they are only expected to be extras on TV and not to bother with shouts of "Thebes, go now!". In short, from a football where your team plays half the matches with a shirt that isn't theirs, what can you expect?
If La Liga wants to grow, before getting involved in transatlantic matches, ask the English Premier League how it does it to earn much more without pressing much more. Miami wasn't "fair." What things envy makes you say.